The Oshawa Times, 6 Oct 1961, p. 1

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY A bore is a person who always has plenty of time to waste -- yours. dhe Oshavon Time Rt a ra im 0 WEATHER REPORT Sunny with a few cloudy intervals and little change in temperature Saturday. Price Not Over VOL. 90-- No. 232 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1961 Authorized Post Office a as Second Class Mail Department, Ottawo EIGHTEEN PAGES GENERAL STORE A ec . charged with robbing THIS STORE ROBBED --Oshawa Lemass Party Loses Clear Irish Majority They fielded 21 candidates. Imes Photo DUBLIN (CP)--Prime Minis-jture several of the remaining Boy's WHITBY (Staff) -- Observa- tions of an alert eight-year-old Whitby Township lad are credit- ed today with leading to the arrest of two Toronto women, the Almonds general store on Thurs- day afternoon. Taken into custody minutes after David "Butch" Sherk, of 19 Queen's road, Whitby Town- ship, gave a description of a car were: Elizabeth Cox, 19, of 7 Withrow avenue, and Carol Thompson, 22, of 283 St. George street. David said that he arrived at {the door of the store, about two |miles west of Whitby on High- |way 2, on his way home from |Cloverlane School. As he reach- led the door, he said, a woman |wearing black jeans told him ter Sean Lemass' Fianna Fail|l6 seats--but not enough to party today bowed to a resurg-/give him an over-all majority ent opposition and lost its clear of at least 73 seats. jority in the Dail Ei pos e Dail Eireann cw NGS TO LABOR As the count in Wednesday's| The dominance of the Fianna election neared its close, Le-|Fail was challenged by the Fine {to wait outside. | Seconds later, he said, that |same woman and another woman ran out of the store, They had never actually : : d taken their seats, anyway. They| leaped into a two-tone car, an |drove away, towards Ajax. had boycotted parliament,| . 5 partly as a protest at the par. David went inside the store All were beaten. The four Sinn Fein deputies in the outgoing Dail lost their seats. mass' party still was certain of|Gael--its major rival--and the emerging the largest single po-| Labor party. The result was litical force, but it was not/stalemate. A strong swing to wouldn't sit in parliament this going to be big enough to gov-| Labor was a feature of the elec-|time either. ern alone. tion, At the time of the dissolution Lemass thus faced the pros- pect of persuading some oppo- his parliamentary majority had| pe parties was: sition group to come in to help become clear, the Laborites had) Fianna Fail 75, Fine Gael 41, form a coalition to rule the{shown their new strength, Labor 12, Sinn Fein 4, Clann na Irish Republic. | boosting the 12 seats held in the paimhan (Farmers' party) 3, Early today, w th only 16 ofjold Dail to 14. National the 144 seats in the dail still to| The extreme Republican Sinn|crats 2 Clann na Poblachta be decided the Fianna Fail had Fein (Ourselves Alone) move-| (Republican party) 1, others 7, won 63 seats against a com-/ment--political arm of the out-|yacancies 2. bined opposition total of 65 lawed Irish Republican Army--| Apout Lemass was expected to cap 'met crushing defeat. voted. The Fianna Fail col- Suspect Politics | | 000 to 374,196 and Labor boosted its poll by 27,000 to 138,117. e Asia countries are/Canadian universities and a rty 2, Independents 6, Labor about what they con- number of national organiza- Ly decided 16. but it was a drop of almost In Peace Program "y's |stood when counting ended for sider the political coloring of the|tions. The Canadian National American Peace Corps pro-|Commission for UNESCO is M T ] Away Right |Gael increased its vote by 47,- UNESCO said Thursday some year under the sponsorship of ciann na Poblachta 1, Farmers utheast Southeast Asia undertaken at|c.. the request of Canadian Univer- SEES DIFFEREN fms ear «ol sity Service Overseas, of which : not = 3 Progressive Dem o- 1,500,000 Irishmen he is acting executive secre- 1G graduate of the University of lasgow who served on the Ca- tary. {nadian delegation to the 1959 During the tour he conferred oxford conference which estab- with Asian leaders in different|jcheq the Commonwealth schol-| fields on how Canada's OoWn|archip program, said there are program of sending out youngia number of differences be- college graduates to assist de-|;ween Canada's veloping countries can best be|ccheme and the Kenne carried out. Corps plan. For one thing the Canadian Co t EX] Dead | project is strictly non - govern-|eration be given to taking away In Rail Crash {mental -- though its organizers|the men's right to strike. {hope the federal government! "This would be a drastic will help pay transportation measure," said Chairman T. A. {costs of young graduates going Irwin, "but drastic measures abroad. may well be justified in view of HAMBURG (AP) -- Railroad| officials today counted 33 per-| sons dead and at least 41 in-| jured after a packed suburban passenger train crashed into a the fact patients' lives are at halted repair train Thursday Leaves Conferenc | stake." | Mr, Irwin said the hospital is {in a precarious state since @ members of the International |Union of Operating Engineers night. VIENNA (Reuters) -- Vasili| walked off their city services The toll might rise, officials Emelyanov, chief of the Soviet|johs last Thursday. of the state-owned railroad said. delegation, today walked out of" He said that since the 40 A number of those injured are the conference of the Interna- members of the 135 - member on the critical list. {tional Atomic Energy Agency. (Local 700 who work at the hos- The passenger train had just] The walkout occurred shortly|pitals went on strike, a few su- left Berliner Tor station in| before Soviet - opposed Swedish pervisors have been in charge downtown Hamburg when it|scientist Dr. Sigvard Eklund{of operation and maintenance. rammed into the repair train|was sworn in as the agency"s| Mr. Irwin warned that '"'any which. was Joaded with wide new director-general to succeed breakdown of water, steam or steel beams used in bridge| American Sterling Cole, effec: electrical facilities - would be building. tive Nov. 30. disastrous." 80,000 compared to the last elec- |tion in 1957. | On the other hand, the Fine OTTAWA (CP)--The associ-| This program is being co-or- : . ate secretary of the Phi Po by the University Serv- the night at 4:30 'am. local National Commission forjice Group, set up earlier this| gianna Fail 63, Fine Gael 42, gram. acting as the exécutive agency Malaya-born Lewis Perinbam for the new group, helping it to returned recently from a tour of (get on its feet. To Strike HAMILTON (CP)--The chair Iman of the board of governors (ating engineers' strike -- Thurs- day night recommended consid- Russian Delegate 3 More Heavy Blows To Mine Mill Union SUDBURY (CP)--The Inter-tivities" of the national officers.|putting Local 598 President Don national Union of Mine, Mii! and Smelter Workers (Ind.) already hard pressed to retain its mem-| bership against rival organizers, | took three new blows Thursday | night. At separate meetings of union locals: 1.' The president of Local 637 at Port Colborne, quit his post| and signed with the United Steelworkers of America (CLC). 2. Remaining members of the An estimated 1,200 of the 17,- 000 members in Sudbury's Local 398 attended a meeting here| Thursday night, punctuated for| a time by heckling from some| 300 members who left after a| sharp exchange with Local Vice- President Donald McNabb, ASKS INQUIRY i The meeting passed a resolu- | tion calling for a federal in-| quiry--with the results to bel mill Gillis and other local officers before a union trial for their support of the Steelworkers. Earlier Thursday, James Robertson, Sudbury representa- tive of the Canadian Labor Con- gress, said the Steelworkers have 452 organizers at work signing Inco employees here. The Steelworkers seek signa- tures from 60 per centsof Sud- bury members before pressing Port Colborne executive, while Made public--into mine - for certification as bargaining supporting the union's national|l€adership. agent. The Sudbury local in- officers, called for a house Another resolution urged the cludes more than half of Mine- cleaning .of Communist influ-|{local's executive, long at odds |yirs membership. ence with national officers and now | 3. Dissident Sudbury members| openly favoring the Steelwork-|SIGNS MEMBERS asked the federal government to|ers union, to seek an injunction| At Port Colborne, with its investigate the "subversive ac-|that would restrain national of-/more than 1,300 Mine-Mill mem- ers, the Steelworkers signed | |ficers from interfering in nego- Local 637 President James Ba- CITY EMERGENCY tition of Ireland, and they said|t0 see what was going on and in an e'ection pledge that they was told by Mrs. Mary Ziejew- |ski that the store had been rob- |bed of $25. David gave police a |description of the car he had Long before Lemass' loss of of the last Dail the states of|S€en and minutes later, using that description, PC Lawrence Watson, of the Pickering Vil {lage Police Department, stop- {ped a car in the village and the {two accused were arrested. Mrs. Ziejewski, 56, had been minding the store on Thursday while her daughter and son-in- law, Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Ka- lamaga, owners of the store, were away. Mrs. Kalamaga is a student at the Toronto Teach- ers' College and her husband works in Ajax. -She said that shortly before 4 p.m., a woman came into the store to inquire about maga- zines. After a moment, she said, |the woman left. : | Minutes later, said Mrs. Zie- |jewski, the same woman and a companion entered the store. There were three other custo- mers in the store at the time. While. Mrs. Ziejewski was waiting -on the other customers, she said, the two women picked up a carton of cigarets, a pound of ham, a half-dozen eggs, two cans of soup and a quart of milk, as if to make a pur- chase. As the three other customers left, she said, one woman step- ped to the door and told David Sherk to stay outside. The other| woman came behind the counter. Then, who had been at the door pro- | she said, the woman |cash register." | Mrs. Ziejewski said she hesi- [tated and the woman told her "hurry up or I'll kill you." Meanwhile, she said, woman behind the counter, be- House Speaker Has Cancer, 'Beyond Surgery DALLAS, Tex. (AP) -- Sam Rayburn, 79-year-old Speaker of the House of Representatives, has cancer and it has spread to such an extent that doctors said Thursday "no further surgery is anticipated." President Kennedy asked the zountry to join him and Mrs. Kennedy "'in prayer for Speaker Rayburn, who has served his {nation so well and so faithfully |for $0 many years." Depending on Mr. Sam's {stamina, one doctor said, he could hold out for several months, even longer. Another said '"'two or three weeks" '|seemeéd more likely. A non-medical aide to Ray- burn said. following Thursday's exploratory surgery the end could come in several days. When Rayburn laid down his gavel late in August and left Washington before Congress ad- journed, he was suffering from what he said doctors had diag- nosed as lumbago. He continued to lose weight while at his Bon- ham Farm and finally yielded to persuasions of friends and doctors that he enter a hospital for a check-up. | Leaders Warn Of 'Red Infiltration OTTAWA (CP) -- The labor ministers of Canada and the United States today urged orga- nized labor to be watchful and resolute in dealing with Com- Tip by Gives Aid i= Lo Police the cash register. Mrs. Ziejewski said that it is impossible for strangers to open the cash drawer unless they are shown and, fearing the cash register might be broken, Mrs. Ziejewski said she opened The money was taken from the cash drawer, she said, and one woman grabbed the carton of cigarets and both ran from |the store, leaving the other groceries on the counter. 45 Ri icy, and that this was in fact| fl policy of the government--that| DAVID 'BUTCH' SHERK Mrs. Ziejewski called the Whitby Detachment of the OPP and PC Eric Trowell and PC Joseph Tullock, who had been cruising in the area were at the scene in minutes. They got a description of the car used, from David Sherk, and flashed the alarm to Pickering Town- ship Police Department as well as neighboring departments. Cyril Cooper, of the township force, relayed the message to Pickering Village PC Lawrence Watson. ; On the odd chance that the wanted car may have gone north to the third concession, PC Watson drove north from the village. As he passed the Pickering District High School, |he said, he noticed a two-tone two women in it. side Mrs. Ziejewski, started to frisk her and then tried to open Dief Backs Arms Ban Petition OTTAWA (CP)--The leader of | * |a delegation opposing nuclear| | weapons for Canada said today {that Prime Minister Diefenba- {ker fully endorses its stand. | Dr. James S. Thompson, for- {mer moderator of the United BORDER SHOTS BRING PROTEST Call Incident Irresponsible BERLIN (AP) -- The three Western allies today sharply protested to the Russians against two shooting incidents involving Communist East Ger- man police in Berlin's French sector. British commandant Sir Ro- han Delacombe called on his So- [Church of Canada, led the dele- | gation which presented the peti- tion. Bearing 141,000 names against nuclear arms, it was {gathered by the Canadian Com- | mittee for the Control of Radia- viet counterpart Col. Andrei I. Solovyev to deliver the protest personally on behalf of all Three Western commandants, an allied spokesman announced. Delacombe told Solovyev that the incidents resulted from Sgt. Richard Bodley and PC| {tion Hazards. | The delegation was with the| | prime minister for an hour and| Dr. Thompson said afterwards/ that Mr. Diefenbaker told the group the government's policy was "exactly" what the delega- tion advocated. "'He said he supported our pol-| POSSIBLE CHOICE Montreal newspaper Le Nou- veau Journal says federal Mines Minister Paul Comtois will be named this week lieu- tenant - governor of Quebec. The newspaper says Prime Minister Diefenbaker suggest. ed the name to acting Prem- jer Rene Hamel Wednesday in Quebec City. --CP Wirephoto | there would be no nuclear arms, {for Canada in peacetime," Dr.| | Thompson told reporters outside | "dangerous and irresponsible action" by the East Berlin Communist police. Gen. Lucius D. Clay, Presi- dent Kennedy's personal repre- sentative in Berlin, this morn- ing made an on-the-spot inspec- tion of the dangerously tense sector--the Bernauer strasse. The street, divided by the Communist-built wall now cut- ting through Berlin, has been the scene of two shooting in- cidents in the last two days. {the prime minister's office. { | "He said that if there was a| {world war then NATO would | {have to have nuclear weapons, | {but he assured us they would never be used offensively," added Dr. Thompson, a McGill] University professor. { "We're advocating that the, government do what it is doing| {now," Dr. Thompson told re-| |porters. "We're advocating that! paARIS (Reuters)--Russia to- there be no change." |day exploded the 18th and most The petition opposes the powerful atomic bomb in its spread of nuclear weapons to present series of tests, the nations or military alliances not| French Atomic Energy Commis- already having them and urges|sion reported. that nuclear weapons be kept oft 'Officials said that the biggest Canadian soil. explosion so far detected took The meeting in Mr. 'Diefen-| place today at 8 a.m. GMT (2 baker's East Block office coin- 'a.m. EDT) in the Soviet Union. cided with the start of a 72-| The official said the device hour demonstration on Parlia-\was 1% to two times more ment Hill by university students powerful than the 17th, which and members of the Voice of occurred two days ago. The Women. | Wednesday blast was of the or- Most Powerful Russian Blast near Novaya Zemlya, in the Arctic, where several tests al- ready have been carried out. TO DEVELOP BOMB Observers believe the current Soviet tests are designed to de- velop the 100-megaton bomb of which Soviet Premier Khrush- chev has boasted. The Soviet Union dramatically announced that it was resuming nuclear testing Aug. 30 and ex- ploded the first bomb Sept. 1. The United States said Sept. convertible approaching, with 5 that in view of the Soviet 0 | jy- nly a handful of students be-| der of several megatons--equiv. Rove il Wolk DSU teres He turned his cruiser around|gan the picketing, but it was ex-| alent to several millions tons of and caught the car at the west| pected the number would grow TNT, but only underground to avoid fallout. The U.S. then announced limits of the village on Highway 2. Moments later PC David | Fleming, of the Pickering Town-| proposed |of Hamilton General Hospital--|juced a gun, pointed it at Mrs.|ship Police Department, ar-| dy Peace affected by the week-long oper-|ziejewski and said "open the|rived to hold the two suspects {until the OPP took them into| | custody. Mrs. Ziejewski reported that | one of the women who entered the her store left her purse in the| |store. Police have taken the {purse into their custody. | Police also reported that a |search of the car turned up a starter's pistol under the seat. The Toronto girls were brought before Oshawa Magis- trate's Court, Friday, charged {with taking $14 and some pack- {ages of cigarettes from Al- {mong's General Store in Whitby, and /intimidation with a starter pistol. Magistrate F. S. Ebbs re-| manded the case until October] 10, in the Whitby Court. | to between 700 and 1,000 by Sat- | {urday, | French seismographs indi lcated the explosion took place|tWo underground tests. CAIRO (AP)--President Nas- ser, virtually conceding the death of his United Arab Repub- lic, says he will not oppose ef- regime to join the United Na- tions and the Arab League. In an address whose concili- atory tone astounded observers in Cairo, Nasser said "there is no need for a political or dip- lomatic blockade of Syria be- cause the Syrian people would suffer." Only a short time be- fore, the Cairo press had been Protestors, 'Students In Clash MOSCOW (Reuters) -- Soviet | students clashed with their pro- |fessors in the 32,000 - student Moscow University Thursday during a visit by 30 Western anti-nuclear "peace marchers." The clash came when the pro- fessors tried to close the meet- ing after an hour during which the peace marchers' spokes- man, Brad Lyttle of New York, was given only 15 minutes to present their views on general disarmament and unilateral nu- clear disarmament. The peace marchers, Amer- icans and Europeans, arrived { ing the rebels as imper- ialists. The address at first delighted {the Syrian revolutionaries, and Nasser Concedes Demise Of U.AR. forts of the revolutionary Syrian | Fallout from the Soviet tests has sharply increased the amount of radioactivity in the atmosphere which many scien- tists believe harmful to human S. Nowhere has the level of ra- diation reached the danger point but in many places it is falling again. Nasser indicated he wants a| Syrian plebiscite stamping voter | approval on the outcome of the| revolt before he would be will: | $15,000 Damages ing to exchange envoys. The| In Port Hope Fire Syria regime has promised elec-| / 'y | PORT HOPE (CP)--Loss was tions within four months. {estimated at $15,000 from a fire The Egyptian leader assailed which early today destroyed a governments that already have restaurant on Highway 28 just recognized the new Damascus north of this north-shore Lake regime. He termed Turkey Fas-/Ontario town. cist, Iran pro-Israel, Jordan a| The restaurant; owned by Stan feudal relic, Nationalist China|Crosset, was unoccupied at the an outcast, and Guatemala atime. Origin of the blaze has not The state department has called on Soviet authorities to avoid shooting incidents on the Berlin border. Max Maron, the East Ger- man Comriunist interior minis- ter, sent sharply worded pro- tests to West Berlin Mayor Willy Brahdt and the French commandant, Gen. Jean La- comme, over the shooting of an East German policeman by West Berlin police. Thursday East German police fired warning shots at a West Berlin policeman and at a work- man laying a cable who stepped across the forbidden line into the eastern sector. East Berlin police also engaged in a rock fight with jeering West Berlin- ers. Communist police Thursday night shot dead two East Ger- mans trying to swim the Spree River near Oberbaumbruecke Bridge, which forms the border between the U.S. and Soviet sec. tors, West Berlin police said. One refugee was killed only a yard from safety. Police said a total of 14 East Berliners and East Germans in- cluding one policeman, fled to the West during the night. Mayor Willy 'Brandt of West Berlin asked the Western pow- ers for authority to increase his 15,000-man police force as ten- sion increased along the barri- cades dividing the city. The latest flareups began when a Communist policeman was wounded Wednesday night. West Berlin police said they opened fire fired by East German police at fleeing refugees whizzed by them. Agree On Secretary UNITED NATIONS (CP) -- The United States and Russia were reported agreed today on U Thant of Burma as tempor- ary UN secretary-general, but many problems remain. Informed diplomats said the chief of Burma's UN delegation is acceptable to both countries. There was no confirmation from either the U.S. or Soviet dele- gation, A US. spokesman said, how- ever, that Ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson conferred Thursday with U Thant. If the agreement is affirmed, still to be worked out are the two basic questions of how the interim ofifcial is to be elected and what his powers will be. Dag Hammarskjold ran the executive branch of the world peace body. But the Russians, who fought to unseat the Swed- ish diplomat up to the hour of his death in an African plane crash, want to surround the temporary official with advisers. fruit company government. been determined. |Syrian Premier Mamoun Kuz- {bari offered Egypt the hand of | friendship. But he took a new, | skeptical attitude this morning. | A Damascus broadcast quoted {Kuzbari as saying Nasser {agreed not to oppose Syrian membership in the United Na- |tions only because he realized it |was inevitable. Kuzbari said {Syria had been promised free {elections and '"'our only wish is |that the Egyptian people would |have the same opportunity." Lesage Wants Market Links | PARIS (CP)--Premier Jean | Lesage of Quebec opened his | province's new legation in Paris {Thursday and said Quebec |wants strong links with the in Moscow this week and staged| pean Common Market Peace oa the bomb" dem-|™y ® nvited French participa- ea a1 tion in the development of Can- |. The march originally started|ada's wealth and said the Que- |in San Francisco last Decem- pac delegation would work ber. The anti - nuclear cam-|;josely with the Canadian Em- |painers irekked across the phasey' in dealing with cultural, | United States and Europe, pick-| economic and fechnical matters {ing up supporters along the | of the province. | way. He said he had explained to Just for European financial inter before the hour = munist infiltration of uni on Thursday's meeting was up, ajests that Quebec plans a gen- ranks. {West German marcher, 20-year- eral investment corporation to tiations with the huge Interna- |birad and a group of his sup- PHONE NUMBERS | said he was preparing to set up "I am divesting myself of the {his own negotiating i vias of this office," Babirad to work out a forthcoming con-/told the meeting, "donning {tract with Inco. working clothes and going into The local already ob- the plant to spearhead a drive {tional Nickel Company. Kenneth | porters after a dramatic speech POLICE 725-1133 National President : |Smith of Toronto had earlier({t0o a union meeting. FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 + HOSPITAL 723-2211 has tained an injunction restraiging for the next union to represent Smith at least temporarily fom|Inco employees." U.S. Labor Secretary Arthur Goldberg said the expulsion of| movement is not a question of| violating civil liberties but of| preserving ; union mov ent. old Johannes Meyar, said: | help start new industries. The "When ! came here and saw public would be asked to invest Communists from the labor|you supporting your govern-|in the corporation as well as| on television and giving blood ment on nuclear tests, I discov- | private interests. ered that your position was no! One possibility was establish- free, independent different from that adopted of- ment of a manufacturing plant cl'nic at St. Gregory's Audi- ficially in the West." |for European cars. Gladstone avenue, Oshawa. The nurse assisting Mr. Pade is Miss Evelyn Morrison. The television set was set up on the basis of "If yju can't beat 'em, join 'em § , idea. This Watching the World Series | at the monthly blood donors' gtorium is Ludwig Pade, 118 NOT PAINLESS FOR YANKEES little scheme helped to draw 153 blood donors Thursday af ternoon. A total of 369 attend. ed of whom 28 were from the Bell: Telephone Comp)ny. ~Qshawa Times Phote

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